Bahrain TaxiFind online the nearest/available taxi to your location2014-07-29T09:44:36Zhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/feed/atom/WordPressadminhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/?p=1092010-10-27T06:46:37Z2010-10-27T06:46:37ZTaxi drivers have blocked Zagreb city centre in protest over the arrival of 267 new drivers they say will take their jobs away.

According to new regulations city officials want to introduce more competition on to the taxi market in the form of available cabs, limit drivers’ licences to five years and regulate fares making the maximum equal across the board. City officials also want all taxis to be white within five years.

But cab drivers say the new regulations will mean many of them lose their jobs.

The new taxi laws come into effect today (Tues).

]]>0adminhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/?p=1052010-08-19T21:32:51Z2010-08-19T21:32:51ZTransAD Facility would accomodate drivers and their cars

Abu Dhabi’s taxi operators are planning to set up a massive village for their cars and employees, accommodating nearly 18,000 people and 6,000 vehicles, the Arabic language daily Alkhaleej reported on Wednesday.

TansAD, which manages the bulk of taxi services in the Capital, said the project is intended to upgrade services by providing housing to drivers and other employees, maintenance for the taxicabs and offices, the paper reported.

“This taxi village is part of TransAD to ensure discipline and better organisation within the taxi services…it will help provide asmany cars as possible to the public as it will also include parking for the taxis,” the paper said.

It did not say where or when the project would be established but noted the newly-introduced silver taxi cabs in the Capital would increase to nearly 9,200 from around 7,147 vehicles at present.

The silver taxis began rumbling on Abu Dhabi streets three years ago to replace the famous old yellow-and-white cars that had served the emirate for more than 30 years.

The old cabs were owned by UAE nationals, who have been compensated for the loss of their taxi services.

According to TransAD, which is supervised by the Abu Dhabi Department of Transport, national taxi owners were entitled for Dh1,000 a month for 25 years.

TransAD was set up in 2006 to carry out the taxi replacement plan under the supervision of the Department of Transport.

]]>1adminhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/?p=792010-08-18T12:27:40Z2010-08-18T12:27:40ZDAVID Wheeler is a hard man to get hold of.

The Maryborough cabbie and director of B&W Taxis spends his days making sure people arrive safely at their destinations – and customers are his top priority.

Recently installed state-of-the-art navigation systems mean customers aren’t left waiting so long to get a cab.

“The good thing about this new system is that drivers are getting to the customer a lot quicker,” Mr Wheeler said.

“All of our cabs have this system now and it’s going to be rolled out across Queensland.”

The navigation system works in a similar way to cbut is connected to an on-board computer that logs details of every job.

“It practically takes us straight to the door of the person we are picking up,” Mr Wheeler said.

“It’s especially helpful for our newer drivers. It also makes it easier to track jobs.”

Advances in technology have made it safer for taxi drivers to work alone and late at night.

It has been common practice for drivers to carry radios with an alarm system that could be activated in an emergency.

In the past the alarm system was reliant on radio reception, but that is no longer the case.

The new system has an inbuilt SIM card and works using Next G technology so, even if there is no reception, drivers can raise the alarm in dangerous situations.

“I started driving taxis when I was 19 and I’m 43 now,” Mr Wheeler said.

“There’s a real social aspect to the job. I enjoy meeting lots of beaut people.

“This new technology is helping speed things up a bit.”

]]>0adminhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/?p=732010-08-17T14:16:16Z2010-08-17T14:12:58ZTaxis in Moscow could shortly be in for a shake-up, as the city government plans to test drivers on their knowledge of the capital’s streets and their c.

Under a new set of proposals from City Hall’s Transport and Communications Department, all taxi drivers would have to have medical certificates as well as at least three years’ experience driving a relevant vehicle.

The department also plans to develop a set of tests that would help taxi operators determine whether the drivers they are hiring have a sufficient command of spoken Russian and can find their way through the city.

The proposals further stipulate that only cars that comply with Euro-2 environmental standards and are equipped with a meter would be permitted to operate as taxis.

Currently the Moscow taxi market is clearly divided between a legitimate segment, represented by authorised operators, and thousands of “gypsy” cabbies.

Intra-city travellers often prefer the latter because their fares are noticeably cheaper than those charged by legitimate drivers.

A large part of the unlicensed taxi market is dominated by impoverished drivers from other former Soviet republics. For many of these gypsies, driving a taxi in the capital is a way to send money back home.

A spokesperson for the city’s Transport and Communications Department told The Moscow News that the proposals are currently being examined by the department’s experts, after which a working document along with amendments will be sent to the city government’s legal department.

The city representative was unable to give a time-frame for the proposals to come into effect.

Licensing grey area

The biggest obstacle in the way of bringing order to the city’s taxi operation, according to the Moscow government, is that under a federal law enacted in 2005, taxi operation is no longer subject to mandatory licensing.

It is not clear, moreover, how the proposed measures would work in a situation when taxi drivers don’t have to apply for licenses.

Similarly, experts are sceptical about the Moscow government’s proposed steps.

“The taxi business is currently developing very chaotically,” Sergei Kanayev, head of the Moscow office of the Russian Car Owners’ Federation, told The Moscow News.

“On the one hand, the existing situation is good for passengers because they have frequent opportunities to catch cheap rides around the city; on the other hand, actual taxi operation is totally disorganized.

“The Moscow government’s proposals are far from what needs to be done,” Kanayev went on to say. “There is a need for real rules of the game that would turn [taxi operation] into a real business.

Today it is not a business, but a free-floating market. And ideas about language tests for taxi drivers and testing for their knowledge of the city should come from not the city government, but from employers.

Taxi companies should be made interested in hiring the right people as taxi drivers,” he concluded.

Source: ( mn.ru news , by Vladimir Kozlov )

]]>0adminhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/?p=542010-08-15T13:13:19Z2010-08-12T08:12:37ZBUFFALO, NY (WKBW) — Kevin Schojan was in a panic late Wednesday afternoon after he lost $4,000 in the back seat of a taxi.

“We called around the cab companies and didn’t remember the name of the cab,” he said.

“All I remembered is it was an older gentleman with a yellow cab,” said Schojan, who took the taxi to the bank to make a withdrawal.

A few hours later, he reached the dispatcher at Liberty Cab who helped Schojan track down cab.

Driver James Hari found an envelope in his back seat stuffed with $4,000.

“So I went back and returned it,” said Hari, who recently retired from Ford in Lake View.

He’s been driving a cab for just three months.

“I didn’t hesitate,” he said. “I always try to do the right thing.”

Hari and the dispatcher were both rewarded for their honesty.

“I handed him $100 and I told him to give $100 to Tracy at dispatch,” said Schojan, who said he gave Hari a huge hug when the cab driver returned the cash.

Source: wkbw.com

]]>0adminhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/?p=512010-08-18T23:07:38Z2010-08-12T08:01:59ZMy daughter left her suitcase in the trunk of a taxi on Sunday. She had spent the prior few hours shopping on Michigan Avenue and all of her purchases were in the suitcase.

We contacted the major taxi companies but had no luck finding which cab she used.

The next morning my wife got a Facebook message from the driver’s wife asking if the bag was hers.

The driver’s wife found an old receipt in the bag with my wife’s name and took the time to try to locate her.

My wife proved she knew the contents and the cab driver then delivered the bag to me at the hotel where I was staying. Our thanks to the driver and his wife for doing the right thing. You made my daughter’s day. Thanks again to Cab 5184 – Yellow Cab Company.

]]>0adminhttp://www.bahtaxi.com/?p=472010-08-18T23:06:40Z2010-08-11T22:47:24ZLES Forbes loves what he does. And he will never let anything stop him from doing it.

The affable 58-year-old is back behind the wheel of his trusty taxi after conquering the physical and emotional demons of a horrific late-night robbery and assault.

Les was bashed by the passengers he was driving from Taree to Wingham at midnight on April 23. He was punched repeatedly in the head and a knife was used to sever tendons and nerves in his hand. His vehicle was stolen and later found abandoned in bushland near Cedar Party.

It was an incident that shocked the Wingham community, and threatened to end Les’ days as a taxi driver.

But according to Les, there was never any question of throwing in the towel.

“Getting back behind the wheel, it was a decision I had to make,” he said. “I was not going to let (the assault) stop me from doing what I love to do. I had to prove it to myself. ”

Les is a builder by trade, but has been driving with Wingham Taxis since December last year. Prior to that, he spent two and a half years travelling to Newcastle on weekends to drive for his brother’s taxi company. He loves what he does.

“It’s the variety of people you get to meet and talk with,” Les said. “The conversations you have with your passengers are amazing. You can talk about anything. Politics, life . . . you meet some interesting characters.”

The April 23 assault is currently in the hands of Taree detectives. No-one has been charged with the crime yet.

The Chronicle understands that Les picked up several passengers from a Woola Road address in Taree at 12am on April 23. The passengers then asked to be driven to Wingham.

The passengers told Les to pull over in front of the Wingham Pool. Les was punched in the head a number of times. One of the offenders held a knife to his throat. Les attempted to push the knife away. The blade severed tendons in his hand. Les stumbled out of the vehicle.

The perpetrators fled the scene in the stolen taxi.

“After that, I was just pacing the footpath in front of the (Wingham) pool holding my hand,” Les said. “There was blood everywhere. I was just operating on adrenaline.”

Les was taken to Manning Hospital before being transferred to John Hunter in Newcastle for microsurgery on his hand.

“They had to rejoin the ligaments and the nerve canal in my fingers,” Les said. “I was down there for a couple of days. My hand ended up in a cast and I had very little movement.”

Les spent 12 weeks going to physio and specialist appointments in Newcastle. It has been a long recovery period.

Though the nerves are still repairing themselves, Les now has 100 per cent movement in his hand. He has been back at work for Wingham Taxis for just under a month now.

He will embark on his first weekend fare to Newcastle on Saturday.

“I just want to thank the Wingham community for their support,” Les said. “The number of phonecalls and cards of support our family received was incredible.

“It has been really touching to be sitting on the taxi rank and have people come up and tell me it is good to see me back.”